Award-winning blog for book reviews, author interviews, and anything writing-related.

Monday, November 27, 2017

Interview with novelist Justine Avery

Novelist
Justine Avery joins me today to
chat about her new urban fantasy, suspense, paranormal novel, The One Apart.

During
her virtual book tour, Justine will be awarding a $10 Amazon or Barnes and
Noble (winner’s choice) gift card to a lucky randomly drawn winner. To be
entered for a chance to win, use the
form below. To increase your chances of winning, feel free to visit her other tour stops and enter there, too!

Bio:

Justine
Avery is an award-winning author of stories large and small for all. Born in
the American Midwest and raised all over the world, she is inherently an
explorer, duly fascinated by everything around her and excitedly noting the
stories that abound all around. As an avid reader of all genres, she weaves her
own stories among them all. She has a predilection for writing speculative
fiction and story twists and surprises she can’t even predict herself.

Avery
has either lived in or explored all 50 states of the union, over 36 countries,
and all but one continent; she lost count after moving 30-some times before the
age of 20. She’s intentionally jumped out of airplanes and off the highest
bungee jump in New Zealand, scuba dived unintentionally with sharks, designed
websites, intranets, and technical manuals, bartered with indigenous
Panamanians, welded automobile frames, observed at the Bujinkan Hombu Dojo in
Noba, Japan, and masterminded prosperous internet businesses—to name a few
adventures. She earned a Bachelor of Arts degree that life has never required,
and at age 28, she sold everything she owned and quit corporate life—and her
final “job”—to freelance and travel the world as she always dreamed of. And
she’s never looked back.

Aside
from her native English, Avery speaks a bit of Japanese and a bit more Spanish,
her accent is an ever-evolving mixture of Midwestern American with notes of the
Deep South and indiscriminate British vocabulary and rhythm, and she says
“eh”—like the Kiwis, not the Canadians. She currently lives near Los Angeles
with her husband, British film director Devon Avery, and their three adopted
children: Becks, Sam, and Lia. She writes from wherever her curiosity takes
her.

Avery
loves to connect with fellow readers and creatives, explorers and imaginers,
and cordially invites you to say “hello”—or konnichiwa.

Welcome, Justine. Please
share a little bit about your current release.The One Apart is the epic tale of one
life of a man who’s lived countless lives. The story begins with his beginning: Tres realizes he’s about
to be born, again, and with the conflicting memories of all his former lives. His
struggle, as he impatiently waits for his body to grow to match his adult
awareness, is to find his place in this life, at this time, while uncovering
the reason for his singular situation and the strange entities who appear to
him that no one else can see.

What inspired you to write this book?

For
The One Apart, I woke up one morning
with just one interesting sentence in mind as an idea for a brand-new story:
“he remembered everything.” It felt
really impactful, like the fact that this person remembered “everything” was a
big deal, that it wasn’t supposed to
happen, something went wrong, or maybe, someone would be really upset to
discover this person did remember everything.
That was it. And that’s my favorite part of writing. I love having no idea what
the story is and just writing to uncover it. I wrote two scenes from that idea
and set it aside because I was hoping to write a short story and I knew this
idea was “a long one.” And two years later, when I sat down to start writing my
first novel, I picked up this story idea again. I knew this one was the idea to
run with.

The hot iron skillet slipped from Maria’s hand;
she sighed her relief as it landing safely on the stove burner. “What... did
you decide?”

“I didn’t.” Sancha prodded at her eggs,
recovering her bacon art one eye at a time.

“I thought you—”

“He has one already.
I just don’t know what it is.”

Maria’s subconscious almost recognized the
truth in the statement before it was buried by her conscious again. “Don’t be
silly. Did you choose a name? If not, I will have—”

“No, you will not,” Sancha ended the conversation.

* * *

In the fenced back yard Maria referred to as
“the garden,” sat a rusting swing set for two: Sancha’s favorite spot in the
whole world. Swinging there—in and out of the shade of the broad-reaching maple
tree—seemed to slow time and shoo away all teenage troubles.

“I have to name you,” she called out to her
bright-eyed baby resting in a basket nestled in the grass below her. She swung
her pale legs to propel herself higher into the morning sunlight, her
glittering hair swirling around her. “But you won’t tell me what yours is,” she
pouted.

Her polka-dotted summer dress fluttered in the
breeze as her legs scooped up another pocket of air. “I guess you can’t,” she
concluded on a downswing. “Yet,” she shouted into the air.

What exciting story are you working on
next?
I have a few short stories that belong in a collection full of tales of those
moments in life when everything changes, when a new path is chosen, when we’re
jerked right out of our old ways—all with twists and surprises, of course!

When did you first consider yourself a
writer?

Like
most, I fell in love with the idea of being a writer because I loved to read. When
I was eleven or so, I started my first novel. It was essentially a retelling of
the Cinderella story with a main character named Ella that—SURPRISE!—would be
revealed as a secret Cinderella. It’s a good thing I never finished it! After
that, I believed the folks that told me that writing is more of a dream and not
really a career, so I only wrote sporadically when I was really moved to live
my biggest dream, only for life and that “real career” to get in the way. There
were so many detours—for decades—but now I realize they’re all really valuable
experiences for the life of a writer. Finally, the urge to write, the feeling
that you’re supposed to write, took
over, and I finally gave my writing “dream” the priority it deserves.

Do you write full-time? If so, what's
your work day like? If not, what do you do other than write and how do you find
time to write?
It depends on your definition… With my experience in technical writing, desktop
publishing, and design, self-publishing, taking my writing career into my own
hands like the many businesses I’ve distracted myself with over the years, was
the natural route for me. And, with only myself in charge, that means a lot of
time spent on the non-writing tasks of a writing/publishing career. But I still
carve out my mornings, first-thing, for writing—just creating, not editing, not
plotting. I found I’m most creative and able to “let go” to really get into the
lives of others, my characters, when my mind is fresh from sleep, and I haven’t
yet been exposed to the news of the day or any other distractions. If I get two
hours of writing time in, I’m really happy, and then it’s time to move around
again after sitting so long and let the world and all the other work in.

What would you say is your interesting
writing quirk?

I
don’t know that I have any quirky writing habits. I’m a minimalist when it
comes to my writing environment: desk, comfy chair, tea, maybe a piece of
chocolate, my laptop, a window with a view. I try to keep out all distractions,
so I can focus solely on the story and imagine myself there. There aren’t even
any cute desktop decorations or anything; those are on the “business desk.” I
have to keep out all distracting noise too, so I wear noise-cancelling
headphones and play a loop of beach sounds: crashing waves and the occasional
seagull going by. It’s the only thing I can write with: something without words
or music that would pull me out of the story but sound that helps drown out
outside noises. Is that quirky?

As a child, what did you want to be when
you grew up?
I wanted to be so many things. I grew up traveling the world, playing alone,
self-creating adventures, and loving the outdoors. I wanted to be an ecologist,
just playing in nature all day, or a travel agent, or a detective, or a flight
attendant, or a secret agent, or a paranormal psychologist hunting ghosts.

Anything additional you want to share
with the readers?
I write to explore ideas and satiate my own curiosity. I publish to share the story with others for your own enjoyment. When
it’s in your hands, it belongs to you. There’s no intended lesson or meaning or
ulterior motive; The One Apart is for
you to interpret, for you to explore and discover. So, I hope you enjoy the
heck out of the adventure of reading it!

Links:

Website
| Twitter | Goodreads | AmazonThank you for being a guest on my blog!Thank
you for the fun questions and opportunity to share with your readers!

I'm listed!

Blog Tour Partner - Goddess Fish

Followers

About Me

I'm a NH native and love New England. I love writing about the region, exploring it on foot, on my bicycle, and in my car. There are so many small communities and fun and interesting people in this area, that I could be here a lifetime and not do all it is I want to do. :)

I'm a moderator at The Writer's Chatroom that hosts live chats with guest authors on Sunday nights 7-9PM EST. Join the e-mail list to get notifications of upcoming guests, then stop in and join the conversation!